On 2/15/2013 11:59 PM, Andries Brouwer wrote:
On Fri, Feb 15, 2013 at 10:56:17PM -0600, Ben Scarborough wrote:
On Feb 16, 2013 02:13, Andries Brouwer wrote:
The fragment of text I showed
was not from dialectology, but just from a novel written in Elfdalian.
The symbols are meant to be those of ordinary orthography.
Does that mean there's also a capital S-J?
Probably, in entirely capitalized text. At sentence start I see
capitalized I-ogonek, O-ogonek, U-ogonek, Å-ogonek in ordinary text.
I have only seen the s-j following d or t, not word-initially.

Andries


That would make it analogous in a way to German ß.

The minute things show up in real orthographies the pressure to handle ALL CAPS exists.

The wider use an orhography has, the stronger that pressure is, of course.

A./

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